Sunday, December 23, 2012

7 RPGs: A Theme in Three Parts

SEVEN RPGS I PLAYED

Small-Box Dungeons & Dragons: My sister taught me how to play back in ’76.
I still remember my hobbit characters (I was a little kid, all I ran were
hobbits) killing a Giant Rat. My sister asked me if I wanted to cut open the
body to look for treasure. Of course I did, and I found a gem. THAT WAS THE
MOST AWESOME THING EVER. That’s my “primal moment” of D&D love.

Call of Cthulhu: Another game my sister generously allowed
me to sit in on a couple of times. She showed me how to run non-combat games, how
to deal with problem players, and how to keep going in the face of player
side-tracking.

Villains & Vigilantes:Champions, V&V, and DC Heroes all vied for
my superhero rpg dollars. Playing V&V with Gene Ha showed me just how crazy
you could be at the table. How you could have a complete conception in your
mind and just reveal pieces. It showed be that tension between GM creativity
and what actually goes on at the table- a lesson I’ve been trying to perfect
ever since.

Rolemaster: The game which blew up my sense of the coherency
and necessity of dense rules. It was overtly a grab-bag of high-powered stupid and
fun stuff. We had sessions where we abused the experience point system (1 exp
for each mile traveled and we found a grav tube system?) and the magic system
(so since the spell effects have different names we can crank that up to 64
actions per round) balanced against the cruel heartless nature of the critical
system (“66…and the rabbit bites you in the eye, killing you). Life was cheap
and characters took hours to make up.

Star Trek: I’d played the old FASA Star Trek and enjoyed
that in a hard sci-fi way. Years later Jim McClain ran a ST:NG game without
rules or character sheets. Purely narrative, purely story-telling, purely about
playing out characters and figuring out solutions to problems. I’d been moving
to lighter, less crunchy systems, but this game honestly changed the way I
thought about play. It would take years for the lessons to fully sink in, but
the campaigns he ran made me braver about running new and experimental forms.

Delta Green: I run a lot of games, so I often take playing for
granted. We probably bs more in f2f games simply because we play so much (I
average two f2f sessions a week, sometimes three). However when Ken went to
run, it was all business. We got small talk out of the way and dove in. he took
it seriously and kept the action focused. We weren’t railroaded, but I always
felt forward momentum. That’s difficult in a game of horror, conspiracy, and
uncertainty. I learned the importance of focus and pacing from that campaign.

Werewolf: I don’t care for old WoD Werewolf, or rather it never grabbed me. But a number of people in
my gaming circle really dug it. Derek managed to give me a new appreciation for
the setting. As importantly he showed me how a tightly planned story arc for a
short run game could be engaging and satisfying. His was the first “mini-series”
game I played that felt open-world, even as we moved to the inevitable conclusion.

SEVEN RPGS I RAN

Top Secret: We played all of the original TSR stuff
(D&D, Boot Hill, Gamma World), but I really dug the idea of modern
adventure. So I ran it for my peer group who essentially shat all over
everything I did. Running that made me realize I wanted to play games with
people who dug them, rather than people just screwing around.

James Bond 007: The first game where something clicked for me. I’d
run stuff games but swung wildly between chaos and linear plots. I actually
managed to create some fun at the table and came up with some original bits.
Even when I ran the modules for the system, I felt pretty good about the
sessions. Part of that came from the simplicity of the rules- how they managed
to get out of the way when the players wanted to do something.

Champions: I ran and played Champions & HERO System quite
a bit over many, many years and many, many campaigns. I liked the idea of
balance and the reducibility of mechanics. Everything could be represented as
an equation. The problem came when I tried to run more story and interaction
heavy games- conflict suddenly brought things to a halt. Even knowing the
system well a fight could take a huge amount of time at the table. Beyond that
my mastery of the mechanics never matched that of many of the highly skilled
goobers at the table. I couldn’t compete in the making up bad guys department.
When I gave them challenges above their point value, the PCs would win and then
bitch about the bad guys being overpowered. I enjoyed it for years, but
eventually my tastes changed.

GURPS: The big three I ran for years were GURPS, Rolemaster,
and Champions. My senior year in high school I started to finally have some
idea about the kind of fantasy game I wanted to run. I chose GURPS for
flexibility. The characters were at risk, with death and serious injury being a
constant threat. For many years GURPS offered an easy, go-to system which
everyone knew fairly well. That knowledge didn’t translate into a serious
advantage as it did with HERO System. Instead it made the game and fights go
more quickly. I ran about ten campaigns using it, with an average length of just
under two years. In the late period, I realized that I had stripped out many
elements of the game to get to the rules engine I wanted. Magic never worked as
I wanted it to. When 4e came out, pretty much the entire group of people who’d
played it (close to a dozen) gave up on it.

D&D 3.5: Late in the D&D life-cycle I decided to try
running a game. Most of the group had played it and I wanted to figure out what
the attraction was. That campaign cemented and clarified just how much my
tastes in games had shifted. I fought and struggle with the rules, their volume
and complexity. I ran a solid and fun 12+ session Planescape/Black Company
planar mercs campaign, but only just barely. I‘m glad I did that as an
experiment, but I’m never running any game that complicated and
sourcebook-ballooned again.

Action Cards: Our house rules which have been changing and
developing over the last decade+. Originally I simply wanted something to allow
more narrative on the players’ part, but with actual resolution mechanics. I
liked it and over time tried it with different things (Swashbuckling, Star
Wars, Modern Urban Fantasy). When I suggested moving on to other systems, many
in the group asked to keep playing it. I’ve really come to enjoy it. I expect
it might not translate well to other play groups, but it has become a staple
for us.

SEVEN RPG LESSONS: WHAT NOT TO DO

Gamma World: The GM ought to point out and encourage the
party to murder a newly introduced PC so they can get his stuff. Ideally this
should be done in the first ten minutes of play.

Champions: If you have a mystery, you can never have too
many red herrings and far-out coincidences. It’s a superhero world, so players
really should be surprised by EVERYTHING.

Cyberpunk: You know what players love, mind control.
Especially mind control which ends up killing them.

Hero System: Players really enjoy having their character
concept completely changed by another player’s actions- it’s the best form of
passive-aggressive inter-party fighting.

Rolemaster: If a player seems to be trying to roleplay, the
best thing to do is point at them, laugh, and tell them to stop.

Cybergeneration: Players don’t really like long term
campaigns, so ideally a GM will drop a game after 2-3 sessions.

True20: If you’re not sure what you want for your campaign,
get player input. Have them build characters for you to center the campaign
around. Then make sure you don’t use any of that and do what you want. As a
bonus, tell the players they’ll have to assume completely different identities
and personalities for the campaign, though they’ll still get to play “their
characters.” As an extra bonus, make sure to tie the players into plot threads
which completely reverse and violate their original concept.